Word: published
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Many channels of communication are restricted or closed to those who would evaluate sectarianism. The Editor of Free World wanted to publish my article "Brotherhood: New World Religion" but some members of the editorial board objected and it was never published. A paper in a neighboring city has refused to run the ad. "Which is Wiser? To remain divided into the hundreds of religious sects into which we happened to be born, or to unite in an inclusive Brotherhood to replace existing sects?" on the ground that "Our publisher feels that the interests of the greatest number of our readers...
...every practicing lawyer. On reflection, the New York City Bar Association has decided that this registration fee might be a good idea after all. Last week the association proposed to the state legislature that a similar charge be levied every two years-the money to be used to publish a state directory of lawyers, to finance investigations when charges of professional misconduct are brought against lawyers-and to build up a fund that would compensate bilked clients when professional misconduct includes misuse of funds. For if a lawyer has dissipated a client's cash, the money may be gone...
...time has come," the walrus said, "to speak of many things, of shoes, and ships, and sealing wax, of cabbages and why the CRIMSON won't publish tomorrow or next Saturday and only three times a week for the two weeks after that, which, if you can't guess by this time you are really going to be in trouble...
...editors of Vogue and Viking Press have put together an impressive anthology by "extracting and re-distilling" the best of Vogue since that magazine began to publish in 1893. The World in Vogue chronicles "seven momentous decades of names, faces, and writing that have held the public eye in the arts, society, literature, theatre, fashion, sports and world affairs." An ambitious undertaking, to say the least...
...ever do. In Munich, crowds waiting impatiently for the first editions broke into scuffles when the supply proved inadequate; in Rio, beleaguered news vendors called for police protection. Dailies in South Korea's capital, Seoul, were trapped by a time differential, worked all night with skeleton staffs to publish extras at dawn...